What are the pros and cons of having a cheat day for meals?
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Gl4ever
Posts: 36 Member
I want to hear the opinions of having a cheat day
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Replies
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Pro: you get to eat whatever you want
Con: having a cheat meal/day makes it easy to get off track and fall back into old habits
Compromise: fit the foods you want into your calorie and macro goals0 -
Pro: I get to indulge. I really keep it at more of a "cheat evening" - reasonable breakfast and lunch, no soda, - but lots of people have entire days and do just fine.
Con: None for me. I like it. It helps keep me balanced. Others have found it knocks them off track. That's valid, too.0 -
Real life. If you think about healthy eating as a long term commitment it will be difficult to sustain unless you let yourself splurge on a favorite food or overall calories every now and then. Just keep it reasonable and get back on the wagon.0
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It is completely up to the individual. It doesn't work for me because 1. I can put away 7000+ calories in a single cheat day and wipe out more than a week of deficits and 2. Cheat days tend to turn into cheat weeks for me.
However for those who can do it, a cheat day or meal can provide stress release by giving you the ability to say not today, I'll eat that on my cheat day if I want it, and possibly even help with your metabolism.0 -
I've never done cheat days. I just work whatever I want to have into my calorie goal. I've never really felt the need to "cheat" by doing it that way.0
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I've always had a cheat day, sometimes 2, each week. As long as you can just have your cheat day and not continuing cheating for rest of the week it's a good way to not feel as deprived in your diet. I've read it can also help with your metabolism, but there's always debate about that. I've consistently lost weight each week even with cheat days (until the last two weeks when -- go figure -- I didn't really do my cheat days because I only added a couple beers each day and exercised too much)
Created by MyFitnessPal.com - Free Weight Loss Tools0 -
Pros:
Maintain sanity
Enjoy what you have been missing
Cons:
Can overindulge...ruin a week's worth of work
Leads to more cravings in the long run0 -
pro: they are awesome
con: none for this guy0 -
Pro: It's easier to stick to a tough diet when you know a cheat day is coming.
Con: Once you start over-eating, it can be hard to stop.
I wish I didn't have to cheat, but I know myself too well. I will go overboard at least once a week, so I schedule it for Saturday. So far it hasn't hurt my weekly goals.0 -
I'm also interested in the pros and cons of a cheat day
A question to those that use them, do you still track your calories for the day and how many extra will you typically consume?0 -
I also think it is highly individual. I do not have cheat days or meals. It would completely derail me. In 211 days, I have never gone over my calories. I have, however, enjoyed wonderful meals out, birthday cake, all my favorite foods and several special occasions. I just work it in and plan extra exercise on those days I know will involve special occasion food.
I have given up processed food, junk food, and empty calories. If I were to go back that, I would only be cheating myself.0 -
If you eat 3 days worth of food in one cheat day or meal, you have done more harm then good. reward yourself with feeling good and keeping on track. If you crave something, have a small amount of it - don't save it up for a special day. that way, your body is not getting shocked by sugar highs etc.0
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I've never done cheat days. I just work whatever I want to have into my calorie goal. I've never really felt the need to "cheat" by doing it that way.
I agree.
I'm having a snack of cookies and wine right now and will end the day meeting all my macros and staying under my calorie goal.0 -
I don't believe in cheat days..I have a treat or 2 a day to help with the cravings..somedays my treat my bigger than others but I never take a whole day off.. defeats that purpose if you ask me.0
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I have a cheat meal usually on the weekend if I really want it. It helps me be good when I am dying for something bad like a bag of peanut m&m's while chewing on celery sticks. I had mine yesterday and almost died when I actually calculated the calories for the meals at Village Inn on mfp. One meal that was even scaled down took up a whole days worth of calories. I stretched the sandwich over the course of the day and I am good to go. I also take supplements to keep the food moving right along when I cheat. The scale doesnt yell at me too much the next day.0
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My cheat day has always been Sundays (before my diet, everyday was a cheat day actually). Sundays would start with eggs,sausage,potatoes,and toast for breakfast. Lunch, I would hop on the couch and turn on the football package, and watch all day long, with pizza, or a cheesesteak, fries, etc. Dinner was usually reasonable. It was a lazy day for me, with lots of bad foods & calories. I still plan to relax on Sundays, and unwind, but maybe with 2 slices of pizza, or 1 slice and some fries. Maybe make breakfast consist of egg whites and wheat toast.
Really, now just starting out, I feel like a drug addict getting out of rehab, I dont want to even think about cheating any day. I am afraid I will slip or fall off the wagon0 -
I've never done cheat days. I just work whatever I want to have into my calorie goal. I've never really felt the need to "cheat" by doing it that way.
This ^
Fit some "cheat foods" into your calories and macronutrients for the day.0 -
i tend to have a cheat meal where i save all day and then make what i want fit in to my calories... maybe once a month (like last nights friends bday party) i went over by 500 calories, but i logged it all and cleaned my house top to bottom today as punishment. Makes me feel like i pay for it or earn it.0
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It helps to first identify what a "cheat day" is.
If you say it is eat as much of whatever you want all day long non-stop... then there really is no pro.
If you go by a standard, lets say TDEE+250 or TDEE+500 calories, then you have some sort of basis to argue pro and con.
Pro: It can offset cortisol build up gained through prolonged deficits, which can help prevent plateaus.
Con: It can result in slower than desired weight loss.0 -
Please explain why a cookie would have a different effect on body composition to wheat bread?0
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